Ohio State president Gordon Gee has had plenty of foot-in-the-mouth moments in recent years. The fun, or angst, depending on your point of view, started in Nov. 2010. Here's a quick look at all his missteps.

November 2010: Gee told The Associated Press that teams like TCU and Boise State don't deserve to play in the Bowl Championship Series title game because they don't play anybody. "We do not play the Little Sisters of the Poor," he said. Gee wrote a check to the charity as penance, then also visited a branch of the religious order to learn more about the sisters' work.

March 2011: Gee’s most infamous quote came in a press conference announcing that then-football coach Jim Tressel was suspended two games and fined $250,000 for not informing other Ohio State officials when he learned two of his players might have committed NCAA violations. Tressel learned of the actions through an e-mail tip in April; athletic director Gene Smith said he found out in December. Tressel said he kept the information to himself to protect the confidentiality of a federal investigation and the safety of the players involved.

January 2012: Gee apologized for comparing the problem of coordinating Ohio State’s many divisions to the Polish army, a remark that a Polish-American group called bigoted and ignorant.

"When we had these 18 colleges all kind of floating around, they were kind of like PT Boats, they were shooting each other," Gee said. "It was kind of like the Polish army or something. I have no idea what it was."

December 2012: Gee’s most recent comments that disparaged Jim Delany, the SEC, Louisville and Kentucky, former Wisconsin coach Bret Bielema, and others lead to the announcement that he’ll retire on July 1, 2013. It leads to one of several apologies in the days following the release of the audio in late May.

The final one on this list comes from 20 years ago, but is too good not to share. In his first go-round as Ohio State president, following the Buckeyes’ 13-13 tie vs. Michigan in 1992, Gee said, "This tie is one of our greatest wins ever."